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Heartsick
by Chelsea Cain

List Price: $23.95
Our Price: $16.05  (Hardcover)
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47 new, 55 used (from $1.43)






 
Publisher: St. Martin's Minotaur (9/4/2007)
ISBN: 0312368461
Hardcover: 336 pages
Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.6 x 1.1 inches
Average Customer Review:   based on 74 reviews.

Damaged Portland detective Archie Sheridan spent ten years tracking Gretchen Lowell, a beautiful serial killer, but in the end she was the one who caught him. Two years ago, Gretchen kidnapped Archie and tortured him for ten days, but instead of killing him, she mysteriously decided to let him go. She turned herself in, and now Gretchen has been locked away for the rest of her life, while Archie is in a prison of another kind---addicted to pain pills, unable to return to his old life, powerless to get those ten horrific days off his mind. Archie’s a different person, his estranged wife says, and he knows she’s right. He continues to visit Gretchen in prison once a week, saying that only he can get her to confess as to the whereabouts of more of her victims, but even he knows the truth---he can’t stay away.

When another killer begins snatching teenage girls off the streets of Portland, Archie has to pull himself together enough to lead the new task force investigating the murders. A hungry young newspaper reporter, Susan Ward, begins profiling Archie and the investigation, which sparks a deadly game between Archie, Susan, the new killer, and even Gretchen. They need to catch a killer, and maybe somehow then Archie can free himself from Gretchen, once and for all. Either way, Heartsick makes for one of the most extraordinary suspense debuts in recent memory.
, Chelsea Cain steps into a crowded, blood-soaked genre with Heartsick, a riveting, character-driven novel about a damaged cop and his obsession with the serial killer who...let him live. Gretchen Lowell tortured Detective Archie Sheridan for ten days, then inexplicably let him go and turned herself in. Cain turns the (nearly played out) Starling/Lecter relationship on its ear: Sheridan must face down his would-be killer to help hunt down another. What sets this disturbing novel apart from the rest is its bruised, haunted heart in the form of Detective Sheridan, a bewildered survivor trying to catch a killer and save himself. --Daphne Durham

Questions for Chelsea Cain

Amazon.com: Gretchen Lowell haunts every page of Heartsick. Even when she actually appears in the jail scenes with Sheridan, she reveals nothing, and yet it's obvious she's anything but one-dimensional. What is her story?

Cain: I purposely didn't reveal Gretchen's past, beyond a few unreliable hints. I thought there was a really interesting tension in not knowing what had driven this woman to embrace violence so enthusiastically. The less we know about killers' motives, the scarier they are. Maybe that's why people spend so much time watching 24-hour news channels that cover the latest horrible domestic murder. We want to understand why people kill. Because if we can peg it on something, we can tell ourselves that they are different than us, that we aren't capable of that kind of brutality. Plus this is the launch of a series and I thought it would be fun for readers to get to learn more about Gretchen as the series continues. I just finished Sweetheart, and I promise there's a lot more Gretchen to come.

Amazon.com: As a first-time thriller author, you've got to be elated to see early reviews evoke the legendary Hannibal Lecter. Did you anticipate readers to make that connection, or are there other serial series (on paper or screen) that inspired the story of Gretchen and Sheridan?

Cain: I thought that the connection to Lecter was inevitable since Heartsick features a detective who visits a jailed serial killer. But I wasn't consciously inspired by Silence of the Lambs (or Red Dragon, which is the Harris book it more accurately echoes). I grew up in the Pacific Northwest when the Green River Killer was at large, and I was fascinated by the relationship between a cop who'd spent his career hunting a killer (as many of the cops on the Green River Task Force did) and the killer he ends up catching. I'd seen an episode of Larry King that featured two of the Green River Task Force cops and they had footage of one of the cops with Gary Ridgway (the Green River Killer) in jail and they were chatting like old friends. They were both trying to manipulate one another. The cop wanted Ridgway to tell him where more bodies were. Ridgway is a psychopath and wanted to feel in control. But on the surface, they seemed like buddies having a drink together at a bar. It was kind of disturbing. I wanted to explore that. Making the killer a woman was a way to make the relationship even more intense. Making her a very attractive woman upped the ante considerably.

Amazon.com: Reading Heartsick I was actually reminded of some of my favorite books by Stephen King. Like him, you have an uncanny ability to make your geographical setting feel like a character all its own. Do you think the story could have happened in any other place than Portland?

Cain: Heartsick Hawaii would definitely have been a different book. (Archie Sheridan would have been a surfer. Susan would have worked at a gift shop. And Gretchen would have been a deranged hula girl.) I live in Portland, so obviously that played into my decision to set the book here. All I had to do was look out the window. Which makes research a lot easier. But I also think that the Pacific Northwest makes a great setting for a thriller, and it's not a setting that's usually explored. Portland is so beautiful. But it’s also sort of eerie. The evergreens, the coast, the mountains--the scale is so huge, and the scenery is so magnificent. But every year hikers get lost and die, kids are killed by sneaker waves on the beach, and mountain climbers get crushed by avalanches. Beauty kills. Plus it has always seemed like the Northwest is teeming with serial killers. I blame the cloud cover. And the coffee.

Amazon.com: In a lot of ways, Heartsick is more about the killer than the killings, and it’s hard not to suspect that Gretchen killed only to get to Sheridan. That begs the question: is the chase always better than the catch? As a writer, is it more exciting for you to imagine the pursuit--with its tantalizing push-and-pull--than the endgame?

Cain: The most interesting aspect of the book to me is the relationship between Archie and Gretchen. Really, I wrote the whole book as an excuse to explore that. The endgame is satisfying because it's fun to see all the threads come together, but it's the relationship that keeps coming back to the computer day after day.

Amazon.com: Your characters--Susan Ward in particular--are raw, tautly wired, imperfect but still have this irresistible tenderness. It's their motives and experiences that really drive the story and ultimately elevate it way beyond what you might expect going into a serial killer tale. How did you resist falling into something more formulaic? Did you know what shape Susan and the others would take going in?

Cain: I knew I wanted flawed protagonists. I'm a sucker for a Byronic hero. Thrillers often feature such square-jawed hero types, and I wanted a story about people just barely hanging on. The psychological component is really interesting to me, and I liked that Susan's neuroses are, in their own ways, clues. In many ways, I embraced formula. I love formula--there’s a reason it works. And I decided early on that I wasn't going to avoid clichés for the sake of avoiding them. Some clichés are great. My goal was not to write a literary thriller, but to take all the stuff I loved from other books and TV shows and throw them all together and then try to put my own spin on it. Heartsick is a pulpy page-turner with, I hope, a little extra effort put into the writing and the characters. Basically, I just wrote the thriller that I wanted to read.

(photo credit: Kate Eshelby)





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Customer Reviews
Stock Characters, Overhyped Thriller
I have to lend my voice to the choir and express how underwhelmed I was by this much-praised debut novel. I can only attribute the hype -- and it is hype when amazon lauds this as one of the year's ten best books -- to the possible bankruptcy of the genre itself. I say "possible" because I like the genre, like Thomas Harris, and like serial killer thrillers. But this one was so derivative of Harris without moving the genre in a new direction, and is final revelation of the killer so anticlimactic (I had to scan back to remind myself who this character was), that the only thing that kept me going was the hype that I read here in the amazon and other reviews. When a first-time author gets this kind of praise for such a run-of-the-mill outing, you begin to wonder who she knows and what kind of extra-literary connections she brings to the publishing process.

Read it if you're a die-hard genre fan; if not, keep waiting for the next Thomas Harris. Chelsea Cain ain't it.
 
very good
Heart Sick is an excellent book. It is in the tradition of Tess Gerritesen, but goes the extra mile by putting in shoes of someone suffering from the Stokholm Syndrome.
I feel with Archie and I understand his predicament very well (even though I have never been in a situation such as that myself).
It is a no-win situation as anyone can find themselves in any time in any situation. But with a satisfactory outcome!
Totally readable!!
 
Not "Silence Of The Lambs" but not bad, either
The blurbs on the book jacket make "Heartsick" sound better than it is. By now, pretty much all the variations on the serial killer/lead detective relationship have been exhausted, and Chelsea Cain doesn't add much to the genre other than to make the killer a beautiful woman. Gretchen Lowell is a suitably despicable villain, although asking us to accept that she has a body count in the triple digits is a tall order. Archie Sheridan's shattered life is more believably depicted and elicits some genuine sympathy but Susan Ward, with her perennial-adolescent garb and older men fixation, comes off as more clichéd than likeable.

The editor could have given the manuscript a few more read-throughs, too. Several references are made to CODIS, the Combined DNA Index System used by the FBI, only it's spelled CODUS in the book. It's like the author heard it mentioned on a few episodes of "CSI" and decided to throw it in to make the police investigation sound more legit but didn't bother to do any further research. Sloppy. Accuracy in a police procedural is a must-have, even if it's about something as simple as an acronym.

I also have to agree with reviewers who have stated that the secondary baddie, the After School Strangler, feels incidental rather than a proper character in his own right. What elevates "Red Dragon" and "Silence Of The Lambs" above all the other entries in this genre is that Hannibal Lecter, while horrific and fascinating, does not completely overshadow either the Tooth Fairy or Buffalo Bill; they are fully fleshed-out and all the more terrifying because of it. Compared to them, the After School Strangler amounts to a MacGuffin, necessary to move the story along but of minor importance, ultimately.

That being said, the storyline still shows a lot of promise. I hope the author will abandon the tired talking-with-one-killer-while-trying-to-catch-another plot device and expand on Archie's toxic relationship with Gretchen (as long as they don't end up running away together like Clarice and Hannibal!). If you can get past the gruesome details of Archie's captivity - some of which border uncomfortably close to torture-porn - then this book is cautiously recommended.
 
Just short of great
Comparing Chelsea Cain to James Patterson and Stephen King is an insult; she is a much better and more original writer. I think a more apt comparison, especially from a psychological perspective, would be Dennis Lehane's Shutter Island. I look forward to the next installment in the series.
 
Wonderfully chilling
HeartSick is probably one of the best thrillers I've ever read. Seriously. It's definitely one I'll be reading again but not anytime soon, its way too disturbing for that. It actually took me a couple of days to read because I had to put it down at times to get the dark out of my head. The emotions of the characters are raw and real and the scenes of torture and death were unflinching and relevant. The story moves briskly but is full of character development and depth. I was far more interested in the story of Gretchen and Archie, told in flashback and in the present than I was in the new killer but not enough to become impatient with how the story was unfolding. The capture of the new killer was somewhat rushed at the end and he wasn't really very menacing when compared to Gretchen but really, she's kind of a hard act to follow.
 

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